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David Fawcett

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Preceded by
  
Neil Andrew

Name
  
David Fawcett

Nationality
  
Australian

Succeeded by
  
Nick Champion


Occupation
  
Pilot

Service/branch
  
Australian Army

Religion
  
Baptist

Rank
  
Lieutenant colonel

David Fawcett David Fawcett Wikipedia


Born
  
23 October 1963 (age 60) Narrabri, New South Wales (
1963-10-23
)

Political party
  
Liberal Party of Australia

Alma mater
  
University of New South Wales

Role
  
Former Member of the Australian House of Representatives

Education
  
University of New South Wales

Party
  
Liberal Party of Australia

Previous office
  
Member of the Australian Parliament (2004–2007)

Ave maria david fawcett


David Julian Fawcett (born 23 October 1963, Narrabri, New South Wales) is an Australian politician and Liberal Party of Australia member of the Australian Senate in South Australia since 2011, elected at the 2010 election.

Contents

Fawcett was previously elected to federal parliament, serving for one term as member for the House of Representatives seat of Wakefield in South Australia, elected at the 2004 election.

David fawcett


Early life

Fawcett spent part of his childhood in Thailand where his father worked as an agricultural scientist.

Fawcett was an officer with the Australian Army from 1982 to 2004. He was educated at Royal Military College, Duntroon and the University of New South Wales, where he graduated in science.

He trained as a pilot and became a helicopter pilot for 1st Aviation Regiment. He was involved in operations across Australia and Papua New Guinea.

The next phase of his career was as a flying instructor, learning this role at the RAF Central Flying School in England. He served at the Australian School of Army Aviation and became Senior Flying Instructor for Utility and Reconnaissance Helicopters.

In 1993 he returned to the UK, studying at the Empire Test Pilots' School to become a test pilot. He was posted to Royal Australian Air Force Aircraft Research and Development Unit (ARDU) at Edinburgh, South Australia as an Army helicopter test pilot. He held a number of positions in ARDU and the Defence Acquisition Organisation, culminating in his final appointment as Commanding Officer, responsible for flight test programs for all of the Australian Defence Force aircraft. He reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel before leaving the ADF to enter politics.

Parliament

Prior to the 2004 election, the seat of Wakefield had been dramatically altered in a redistribution. The seat had long been a safe rural Liberal seat stretching from the Yorke Peninsula through to the Riverland and the state's border, but upon the abolition of the safe metropolitan Labor seat of Bonython, Wakefield was moved to take in the outer northern Adelaide suburb of Elizabeth and part of Salisbury, spanning through to the rural mid-north town of Clare—roughly a fifth the size of its former incarnation. The Liberals held the old Wakefield with a comfortably safe two-party margin of 14.6 percent, but the new Wakefield was notionally a marginal Labor seat with a two-party margin of just 1.3 percent.

The previous Liberal member, Neil Andrew, believed this made Wakefield unwinnable and opted not to recontest the seat in 2004. However, Fawcett narrowly defeated the Labor candidate, ex-Bonython MP Martyn Evans, on a swing of 2.2 percent, taking the seat on Family First preferences. Despite an extensive campaign at the 2007 election, Fawcett was defeated by Labor's Nick Champion, suffering a large swing of 7.2 percent. However, Fawcett was elected as a Liberal Senator in South Australia at the 2010 election and assumed his seat on 1 July 2011.

Personal life

Fawcett is married with two children. His family roots are in Kapunda, South Australia and completed high school at Prince Alfred College in Adelaide before joining the army. He has been involved in leadership positions at Clovercrest Baptist Church in Modbury North, Adelaide and Tyndale Christian School in Salisbury East, Adelaide. He has been a contributing member of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots and the Australian Flight Test Society.

References

David Fawcett Wikipedia